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tv   Close Up  CSPAN  February 24, 2012 7:00pm-8:00pm EST

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that her sarno mentioned the first thing to do is always look at that. we do that first and if there's nothing there, you have to move to a different modalities and this is my own statement. there's just too many people in our society. this is what you talk about. some of us are equipped. different people think different ways. different people can cope differently and assess things differently. this is my own judgment. i think is just too many people in our country think there is a pill, drought or surgery that will cure whatever you have. and i think maybe we've been brought up to think that. but there's something a tear if i just get the right though, right to commemorate surgery is going to kill me. and i don't know that we've put enough into the upfront prevention.
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i guess i'll close on this, that when i think of that prevention in the area of pain, it is educating matches the doctors and residencies, but people when they come to school, go through school, that they are knowledgeable about pain and chronic pain and what causes pain and how you do with these things. so they become more knowledgeable about their own symptoms and how things affect them. so maybe then we won't always be thinking that we can just do whatever you want. there's a pillar troppo surgery that will cure what ails us. but there is a lot here. we have to do my research in this area, but it has to be broad. and i will continue to say that this whole area of mind-body cannot be just a flat belly. it has to be this whole search we are doing on how to release so many people that have real pain, not in your head. in your body, where it comes
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from we don't know yet. but that's the one thing i've learned from that her sarno that this is real physical pain. it is not in your head. it is real physical pain. i thank you all very much. but this is a very amazing session. i look forward to working with you on the committee itself in the future. had to do what we can to they can approach this issue with pain and a thorough ballistic comprehensive method as we've been doing in the past. i ask unanimous consent to testimony from the chronic fatigue and immune dysfunction association resubmitted for the record in memory of christy gassee of williamsburg, iowa. i also asked him his consent to testimony from the american cancer society network he submitted for the record. if there's nothing else to add,
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than the record also will be rainout bin for 10 days for any statements or questions to other members of the committee. with that, the committee will stand adjourned. thank you. [inaudible conversations]
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>> one of the tricky things about writing this book for me was thinking that the way to particularly in the international human rights contacts rates were both straddled at a moral imperative and aspirational ideal and a more practical than formal man date.
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>> president obama attended a fundraiser thursday in florida with the first topic coral gables florida.
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the film are hotel for about 45 minutes. >> hello, miami. it is good to see all of you. thank you so much. everybody, please have a seat. thank you. first of all, one should not resemble i'm not going to the game tonight. [laughter] i am mad about that. it's not. it's not fair. but i wish you guys all the best. i want to first valid knowledge a couple people in the audience. first of all, you heard from somebody who i don't know where she gets her energy from. but is just doing a remarkable job as our dnc chair, debbie wasserman schultz, give her a big round of applause. [applause] your senior senator, who i
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expect you will send back to washington, ellen madison is in the house. [applause] and my great friend and former finance chair, provide riskier. [applause] and of course all of you are here. and this is a good-looking crowd. you especially. [laughter] girl raising your hand. yeah, that. miami, i am here today not just because they need your help, although i do. but i am here because your country needs your help. and there is a reason so many of you got involved in the can pain back in 2008. and it wasn't because barack obama was a short and in the campaign.
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and when you're named barack hussein go on my comedy arts are not in your favor in any election campaign. the reason you got involved was not because of me. the reason you got involved was because we had a shared vision about what america could be, what america should be. we had an idea of a shared vision of an america in which everybody who works hard, everybody who has a vision of where they want to take her life, they can succeed. doesn't matter where you come from. does the banner would she look like. does it matter what your name is. bad idea that if you worked hard and took responsibility, that you could buy a home and send your kids to college and retire with dignity and respect. put a little bit away.
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that core american dream felt like it was slipping away for too many people all across the country and we shared a vision in which we started making good decisions about energy and health care and education and instead of trying to divide the country, we tried to bring it together. and we could assure that america for the next generation and generations to come. that is why you got involved. because of that shared vision we have for america. now three years later, a little dinged up here and there, but the message i have for you is that because of you, that change that you believed in has begun
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to happen. as tough as these last three years have been, think about everything we've accomplished together. because of you, we averted a great depression. when i took office, 750,000 jobs were being lost every month. last month we gained 250,000 jobs. we are moving the economy in the right direction. that is because of you. [applause] because of you, there are millions of people around the country who did not health care and either already have health care or worse and have health care and will never again have to think about going bankrupt just because they get sick. that happened because of you. [applause] because if you, we were able to
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take $60 billion that is going to subsidize banks in the student loan program of the site by sending that money directly to student and as a consequence, we now have millions of young people across the country who are getting higher pell grants or eligible for pell grants for the first time for her scene student loan interest rates lower, have access to college and the keys to the american dream. that happened because of you. that is what changed it. changes the decision to rescue the american auto industry from collapse. [applause] you remember there were a lot of people who didn't believe in that. even some politicians said we should just let detroit go bankrupt, we stepped out. as a consequence, a million jobs were saved and the american auto industry has come roaring back
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and gm is now once again the number one automaker in the world. [cheers and applause] that happened because of you. [applause] change is the decision we made to start doing something about our oil addiction, not waiting for congress. and so, and an historic step even without legislation come we doubled fuel efficiency standards on cars. applied them to light trucks come heavy trucks for the first time. it will save consumers alliance of dollars. o. help our environment. it will put us at the forefront of the electric car industry in the forefront of the clean energy industry. now having because of you. because of you, people across the country are going to still be able to serve the country they love regardless of who they love. "don't ask, don't tell" us
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history. that happened because of you. [applause] changes keeping another promise that i made back in 2008. for the first time in nine years, there are no americans fighting in iraq. we have refocused our efforts on those who have carried out 9/11. al qaeda is being dismantled and osama bin laden will never again walk the face of the earth because of you. [cheers and applause] so a lot has happened in three years. and none of this has been easy. none of this was automatic. oftentimes we faced enormous opposition and obviously we are
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still recovering from the worst recession that we have had in our lifetimes. so we've got so much more work to do. but as i said, the good news is we're moving in the right direction. over the last two years, the her screed about 3.7 million new jobs. 3.7 million new jobs. our manufacturers are creating jobs for the first time since the 1990s. our economy is getting stronger. the recovery is accelerating. america is coming back. which means the last thing we can afford to do is go back to the same policies that got us into this mess in the first place. [cheers and applause] that is what we can't afford. now, that is what the other candidates want to do. i don't know if you guys have been watching the republican primary debates last night in
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case you need an incentive. [laughter] they make no secret about what they want to do. they want to go back to the days when wall street played by its own rules. they want to go back to the days when insurance come these could deny you coverage or jack up your premiums for that reason. they want to spend trillions more in tax breaks for the wealthiest individuals, for people like me who don't need it. even if it means adding to the deficit. even if it means cutting our investment in education or clean energy to make it harder for seniors on medicare. their philosophy is simple. we are better off when everybody is set to fend for themselves and everyone makes their own rules. if you do very well at the top and everybody else is struggling to get by. that is their quarry vision for america. we've got a different mission.
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we see america as a bigger, bolder plays. i am here to tell them, they are wrong about america. because in america, we understand yes, we are very good individuals. yes, we don't expect a handout. we are going to do everything we can to make enough of silly dreams, but also understand we are greater together than we are on our own. we are better off when we keep that basic american promise that if you work hard, you can do well. you can succeed. and you can on that home and send your kids to college and put away something for retirement. and that's the choice in this election. this is not just a political debate. this goes to who we are as a people because we are in a make or break moment for the middle class and people trying to get in the middle class but go back
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to an economy that is built on outsourcing in baghdad and sony financial profits that we can build an economy that lasts an economy that's built on american manufacturing, skills and education are an american workers. an american-made energy and most importantly, values that have always made america great. hard work, fairplay, shared responsibility. we've got to make sure that the next generation of manufacturing ideas take place right here in the united states of america. not in factories in europe or china, but in detroit and pittsburgh and cleveland. i don't want this nation to be known just for buying and consuming things. i want us to design our products and making products all around the world. that is who we are. [applause]
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it's time for us to stop rewarding businesses that ship jobs overseas. we need to reward companies that are best in hiring right here in the united states of america. we need to make our schools the envy of the world and that starts with the man or woman at the front of the classroom. [applause] you now, recently showed a good teacher can increase lifetime income of a class or make $250,000. a great teacher can help a child escape or circumstances and achieve their dreams pierside on-air folks in washington -- teachers. i know i've been defending the status quo. i want to give schools the resources they need to keep good teachers on the job, reward the best ones.
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give schools flexibility to teach with creativity. stop teaching to the test here replace teachers who are helping our kids. we can do those things. we have teachers in the house. [cheers and applause] when kids graduate, i want them to be able to afford to go to college. if they've been working hard and got the grace to go to college, i don't want that to get there to ensure because they don't think they can afford it. right now americans are more intuition than they do in credit card debt. and that means congress is going to have to stop interest rates on student loans from corinna. they're scheduled to go up in july right now. colleges and universities have to do their part. i've met with university and college presidents will keep on helping students afford to go to college. taxpayers can find this stuff
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forever. higher education can't be a luxury. it's an economic necessity. an economic imperative for every family in america and they should be all to afford it. [applause] in america built to last is why we are supporting scientists and researchers, trying to find the next breakthrough in clean energy, making sure that happens right here in the united states. we subsidize oil companies for a century. it is time to add 100 years of subsidies for an industry that's rarely more profitable to make sure we doubled down on clean energy never been more promising. solar power when power, via fuel that can break our addiction to foreign oil, create jobs here in america instead for national security good for your pocketbook. we need to build our
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infrastructure. i'm a chauvinist. i want america to have the best stuff. i'd have the best airports and roads in the passports right here in miami that can create more jobs. [applause] [applause] [applause] the lipstick the money we're no longer centimorgans have to reduce the death sentence than the other house to do nationbuilding right here at home. [cheers and applause] and we have got to make sure everyone is doing their fair share. i wanted to finish out. everyone has to play by the same set of rules and everyone has to do their fair share. and when it comes to paying for our government and making sure the investments are a fair so that future generations can succeed, everyone's got to do their part, which is why put forward the buffet role.
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if you make more than a million dollars a year, you should not pay a lower tax rate to her secretary. that is common sense. we have said is unique to an $50,000 or less, you don't need your taxes going up right now. but folks like me, we can afford to do a little bit more. that is not class warfare. it has to do with simple math. if somebody like me gets a tax break that the country can't afford, but one of two things happen. because the deficit goes up, which is irresponsible or we take it out of somebody else. a student who is now suddenly having to pay higher student loan rate for the senior who has to pay more for medicare or the veteran who's not getting the help they need after having served our country, that is not
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ready. that is not who we are. everybody in this room, we are here, successful because somebody down the road was not just thinking about themselves. they were taken responsibility for the country as a whole and thinking about their future. the american stories never been about what we just do by ourselves. it is what we do together. we're not going to win the race for new jobs and business as a middle-class security if we are responding to today's challenges with the same old tired, worn-out, you're inherent economics. what these guys are peddling has not worked. it didn't work in a decade before the great depression. it did not work in the decade before he became president. it will not work now.
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[applause] and this is not just a matter of economics. you know, look, we'll have a stake in everybody's success. if we attract an outstanding teacher by giving her to pay she deserves, given her training she needed, when she designed to teach the next job, we all benefit. if we provide faster internet service so that one store owner and grow america suddenly can sell their products around the world, if we build a new bridge that saves the shipping company time and money, workers, consumers, all of us benefit. we all do better. this has never been a democratic or republican idea. this is an american idea. this is the first republican
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president. the national academy of sciences, the first land grant college on the middle of the civil war. and about that. sure there were folks at the time you said why are we doing all that? i don't want to pay for that. a lot of it is the groundwork for a national economy. a republican, teddy roosevelt called for a progressive income tax. dwight eisenhower built the interstate highway system. republicans supported fdr when he gave millions of returning heroes, including my grandfather, the chance to go to college on the g.i. bill. everybody here has a similar story. think about florida. about miami. it is a microcosm of the country. people from allah for coming here, seeking opportunity. and the reason people came here,
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the reason people continue to come to america is because there is a recognition that in america, we will create the platform for people to succeed if they work hard. that is what is at stake in this election. and i have to tell you, that sense of common purpose that binds us together regardless of our backgrounds, you know, that still exist today. it may not exist in washington, but out in the country, it is fair. he talked to folks on main street, town hall meeting, go to vfw hall, a coffee shop, it is fair. he talked to the incredible numbers of our armed forces, the men and women in uniform, it is fair. go to places of worship, that sense of a bond to something
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larger, it is fair. so our politics may be divided. unobvious way the media loves to portray conflict, but most americans understand that we are in this together, that no matter who we are, where we come from, what they were not, white, latino, asian,, straight, disabled or not, that we rise or fall as one nation and that is what is at stake right now. that is what we are fighting for and have for the last three years. so the main message i have for all of you is as tough as these last three years have been, but that vision you had that let you
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get involved, you're not alone and that vision. the change we saw four at 2008 sometimes has to come as fast as we wanted. there've been set tax. there've been controversies and with everything that has happened in washington, sometimes tempting to believe that maybe the change be hoped for is completely possible. remember what i said during the last campaign? people don't remember. people have very vision of history. they remember the time from grant park until the inauguration. they don't remember how hard it was to get to grant park. [laughter] but i said we'll change, big change is hard and it's going to take time. it takes more than a single term in takes more than a single president. most of all, what it requires is individual citizens like you who
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are committed to keeping up the fight, to pushing and struggling in managing the country so is thoroughly inches closer and closer and closer to our highest ideals. the thing i told you in 2008 what is coming you know, i am not a perfect man if you have type to michelle, and the interest of full disclosure, i told you i am not perfect and i won't be a perfect president. we have a promised? is that i'd always tell you what i thought, where i stood and i would wake up every single day of fighting as hard as they can for you. [applause] i've kept that promise. [cheers and applause] i kept that promise. so if you are willing to keep pushing the may come if you're willing to keep struggling with
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me, if you are continuing to reach out for that vision of america that we all shared, i promise you change will come. if you are going to get just involved, i promise you will finish what we started. if you stick with me, if you press with me, we will remind the world why it is america's greatest country on earth. thank you, everybody. god bless you. thank you. god bless america. [cheers and applause] ♪ ♪ ..
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will
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woo-hoo and the communicators coverage of the consumer electronics show from the loss vegas convention center continues this week. over 3,000 companies showed off the latest technology at the show in january of this year. this week we visit with the ceo of erickson as well as take a visit to the intel booth at the consumer electronics show. first up the ceo of ericsson. >> we're pleased to be joined by the president of ericsson. if you would, tell us about the ericsson company. >> guest: the ericsson company was founded in 1826 and we have
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since then been the world leader in telecommunications equipment now in mobile. today 40% of all of the mobile networks in the world's our networks supporting operators. we have roughly 100,000 employees worldwide and 180 companies. so, we are a company that is doing research and development getting our products to enable the mobility and the networks all around the world. we spend 4 billion u.s. dollars a year for the research and development. >> where are you based and how large in the u.s.? >> we are based in sweden, it is a swedish company however the largest markets we have some 15 to 16,000 employees in the north american market today. >> now, mr. vestberg, when mobile phones in the u.s.
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started to become ubiquitous the ericsson name was a familiar brand name, but not today. why is that? >> i think in the beginning of the mobile networks, the mobile phone was an extension of the networks. so we actually started the network with ericsson mobile phones and then after a couple of years we merged with soa ericsson and made a venture with sony erickson that has been going on for 20 years, and in october timeframe last year we decided to speak up and we are actually selling that back. so, sony will have the handset business that we were part of before so we are leaving the handset. we were part of it from the beginning because it was an extension of the mobile network. today the mobile phone is so much more than an extension of the network. >> why are you leaving the joint venture with sony ericsson? >> the mobile phone hasn't grown so much and today more than the
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voice gadgets. it's a lifestyle gadget. ericsson is developing what's inside. so we are developing fetus inside of the mobile phone and the mobile networks. that is sort of what we are doing. >> if the u.s. consumer is a customer of verizon, at&t, sprint, etc., what ericsson products mikey using? >> most likely when they get phone call that would be to the radio stations and to the equipment that we are a means a player to all of those. so that means that we are doing all of the data they are doing the smart phone when they are checking schricker or facebook. we are sort of all the coverage and the data on the network. >> now mr. vestberg, you are
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doing one of the keynote addresses here at the consumer electronics show. and one of your topics is the network society; what is that? >> i think when we talk about the network society we are talking in two phases. one is in the networked society anything that benefits from being connected will be connected in the future. the other side of it is we believe that this is the revolution that we are into and the technology revolution has two phases. the first is the deployment phase or installation phase where you build up the networks and today there are 6 billion. we don't increase in the years to come but we are reached and based on that we start to see new innovation that we never thought about. we used to imagine when we built the mobile network there was only one service. there was a voice.
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today what we do with the phone is a different thing and you start actually connecting with the health care device in the network that is the second phase and what we call the network society everything in the connect will networks and that is different from what we fought with this process of building the network. we thought it's going to be calling each other why do i need to move third round when i talk to you fit it is given also we are transforming the phone, businesses and a society by health care, education, redefined by using these technologies and that's what i want to talk about, the network society is here and it's important in the consumer electronics part of that because they are a huge part of that change. >> 5.8 billion mobile subscriptions at this point
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world wide and in a recent interview with the consumer electronics association, and you say 85% of the world has a mobile phone subscription. does that raise the issue of spectrum shortage and spectrum usage? >> what we see in the world right now is we are going to see growth. we believe over 90% of the population will have the mobile coverage in 2015. and of course the spectrum is more for using. there are two things that are important. one is that we spend the research and development, and of course we are innovating new ways of using the spectrum more efficient. different ways of allocating in this marketplace. so that we do. on the other hand spectrum is a scarce resource, and of course the more spectrum you have the better it is because you can get better service and coverage consumers and in many cases we need to understand the impact of
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the mobile network. we've done in numerous, we've collected 124 that has been found on broadband and there were to conclusions. one was for every 10% of the broadband you get 1% of stability and so everyone thousand broadband connections you get 18 jobs, so this is this is transforming the country comes of that is why the spectrum is of course a very important piece to gain and get those deficiencies and transforming countries. >> mr. vestberg is a multinational corporation that deals in the 180 countries you have to deal with 180 communications commissions and different spectrum requirements? >> i think one thing that is unique we share a lot of technologies, we share a lot of
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how we use spectrum and there is a reason it can move from sweden to the u.s. to pakistan, wherever, and it works because it is a lot of communication. the english is based on standards. ericsson as the minority on all of the 2g come 3g come and 4g. then we know the scale was going to come and the price. however with the commissioners and every country from one to the other it is very normal in the communications or for the regulators to talk about the latest development and how they can use spectrum. >> to of the issues we worry about here in the united states, the congress, the fcc, piracy and privacy. what is ericsson doing about those issues? >> first of all, your honor absolutely right. we need to be careful because
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everything is and be open and networks will be used and then people are going to get a lot of benefit from it. on the one hand you need the benefits of getting in an effort society. on the other hand, you also need to understand the privacy issues and people to understand what they are getting into. the piracy has been there for quite a while and we have been very clear it is not fair there are many people investing quite a lot in order to do this product and piracy. so i think that we need as an industry to come together to work very hard and see we are not accepting that and we see more and more of that and given that the network would have more and more connected this will be important challenge in that society. >> has ericsson suffered from piracy issues? >> i think that as a world
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leader in the communication from a long time of course there are people that want to. i think it is quite difficult but of course that is probably happening. that isn't my main concern. i think that we share our technology. we standardize the technology so that is part of the game i think that it is a little bit different from our industry that we are sharing in between each other in order to get the most efficient solutions so we have the same solution as we have here in the u.s.. the same technology that is coming out but then we can bring down the cost and the benefit for the consumers. >> have you been to the consumer electronics show before and what are your impressions of the 2012 show? >> i have to be very honest i have never been to the show before. this is the first time i have been browsing around this
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morning looking around and i have to say it is an amazing show. it really shows the gathering of all of the consumer electronics and the developers in the world, and i think it also shows the power of how the development has come see everything is enabled when you go around there which is just amazing in such a short time where no one knew what a smart phone was for five years and now everything is built around the application. so it's amazing to see. really exciting to see. >> cloud computing. how does that figure into your business plan? >> it figures very well because we are going to see the three pillars of transportation. one will be the connectivity order, the mobile coverage come the broadband and the cloud service. those pillars want to transform the industry and i can take an example. in education where you can be in
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a very rural area of you have the connectivity and broadband and to put education in the cloud and students are in every rural areas it is the transformation. the cloud is a very important to bring down the barrier even further for efficiency. it can be health care, it could be another application you put up in the cloud together with the connectivity and the prada band and then you can transform in the industry and get the new efficiency. so i think the cloud is staying very much in the certain products, certain services to operate are in the cloud of but that of course we see even more enterprise solutions and order to redefine the process these. >> hans vestberg, when you look out ten, 20 years what are you most excited about technology why? >> when i look out and think
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about the future, first of all i'm excited that the technology that we are providing is going to be used in a different way the next ten years and sometimes hour own imagination is putting a lot but we will see even more speed coming up meaning it will get even higher speeds. with the higher speeds the new services can come. we will talk about the connect core and have only 100 milliseconds and that might not say so much but what it means is actually one can communicate with a car behind you and when you push the brake on the cart you can send a signal to the car behind you. that is short latency when you use the 4g chip set in the car. then you think about how you can rethink the whole connected car
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because you connect the cars and they can actually see the traffic and avoid accidents and hazards. >> but higher speeds again in the tablets etc. use a lot of spectrum. is there a solution, does ericsson have a solution to develop the product? >> yes, we have the responsibility that the leader in the industry to develop new ways of using the spectrum in a smart way. we will come up with a new set of solutions and i am certain that we will be able to use different technologies, different spectrums at the same time because it's always in efficiency in the spectrum between the different bands and frequencies and here of course there are innovations that we are doing with our engineers and all around the world that want to do that so yes we feel a big responsibility. we are proving you can use the spectrum more efficient.
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>> hans vestberg, the last couple of years the u.s. has told of a national broadband plan. what's been the experience in sweden? spec and sweden when it comes to broadband and the mobile broadband, it has been a very good i would say impact on the society because we have the new innovation especially from the society peace and also the enterprise peace said the enterprise are using that broadband in order to renovate their research. it is good for that. sweden was first and 40 in the world and supplied it to an operator in sweden so sweden is still in the forefront of a lot even though we are a small
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country. >> how is the recession affecting your company? >> i think in the third quarter we reported -- the instability in the markets from the economy has actually taken down investment. now there has been the middle east and probably northern africa we have their challenges which also have taken down the investment so that is what we are seeing so far. the most important we have seen so far is the underlying demand for people using networks, smart phones, etc.. that has to be remaned come and that is of course on the investment level. we will see on the fourth quarter in this year 2012 of the macroeconomics. >> what kind of devices to you use personally? >> i'm using a sony ericsson.
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we stallone sony ericsson even though we are departing so i have a and duraid phone with all of the different types of news i need for my daily work so this is part of my life and extremely regular. >> what about the future of the applications you see that continuing? >> in many cases it continues to be the internet is just growing with information to be i think that you and i want the easy way to find that so they will be important to find your way. i also think that the eight providers would be we of promoting their brand and get the leal community of users that are using the app that they can understand so they can establish a relationship with the consumers which nobody thought
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about for five years before so i think we are still going to see quite a lot of development on the app site how we develop the model for using that to reduce by >> finally, mr. vestberg, what do you say to someone that can look out and see these brand names and all this new technology and words perhaps that they've never heard before and they are scared of the technological future? >> don't be scared of technology revolution because that is bringing a lot of benefit and i think that what you see out here that is what we are creating in the whole mobility that operates around the world. now we see the innovation and that's what i'm talking a lot in the networked society. it's not for you or me or enterprise or society. i don't think anyone should be afraid of it.
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the resolution is a must to actually handle of the growth we have on this planet. >> hans vestberg as president and ceo of sony ericsson. he has been our guest on the communicators. >> that was hans vestberg, the ceo of the ericsson company based in sweden. up next on the communicators, a visit to the intel booth. secure the intel booth at the electronics show we are joined by the manager bryan deaner of intel. mr. deaner, this intel introducing the 2012 consumer electronics show? >> we have an exciting show this year. i think the big story is about the experience that the consumers really have come and intel has great technology and product and it really power as a lot of the new ultrabooks.
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we of the brain behind the technology in their interesting reason to be here. we are at the innovation of the industry. >> mr. deaner, one of the themes of the show this year seems to be ultrabooks. what is then ultrabook? >> it's all about of devotee, taking what you know about performance and computing and putting it in the new style and a new design. >> are these ultrabooks? >> these are ultrabooks. >> they look like laptops. >> there is a couple of things that makes a ultrabook. it starts with the intel second generation quote processor. that's the heart and brain of the overall ultrabook. when you will see very quickly is because the full performance of the laptop is anything but traditional soap you have a couple of things, you have a really sleek design and elegant design and they're all manufactured to be less than one instinct and what we find is wheel of our smart phones and
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the sort of pop right up in our laptop it's typically about of 32nd boot time. when i say altar responsive when you open these of it is about a 72nd startup and you are working with your application programs it is highly responsive. that's the second thing. there's also the new security built into this that brought to you by the hardware software and hardware based on intel pfft that really helps with your overall identity protection what you are doing online on these sort of things and over all of your identity protection this just in a security feature we built into the book's sole it is the public in one. >> there's been a couple different manufacturers here for the ultrabooks to read the work with all across the board? >> the customers are excited about this. we have about 75 designs coming out this year alone. as we introduced it in the last quarter of last year but this year is the year of innovation around ultrabooks, so it's a new
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category and reassuring in the new era of computing. in fact when you see as a gift towards the latter part of the year we don't have the specific designs on the show floor but you will see these ultrabooks that are also convertible so they will have the sort of traditional aspect of the keyboard and performance the you also have touch screens and the screens that flipper now or turnover so it really becomes both a laptop and you know in the form of the ultrabook as well as a tablet so you are getting the two devices and one. >> something else that has come out is the new smart phone to respect that's right. the new smart phone we just announced yesterday, and this is just a sample design and so this isn't the actual new smart phone. but what we've announced as we have the chip that goes inside and the technology that's going inside a smart phone so it's based on the intel processor and we announced yesterday a deal
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with lenovo as well as a multi-year of maltol to become multi unit deal with motorola said you will see more smart phones coming out based on intel. a couple things. first of all its based on -- their we are. there's a couple of special things about it. one is based on the intel processors of there's a great level of performance and also low-power so you can be working on this all day and it doesn't get hot even if you are doing intensive applications. there is a -- it supports full speed to output so you can run video if you want from this. really you can do things around 3-d video imaging and a member of things. >> what about security features?
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>> with our purchase at mcafee last year there's a whole mobile security sweep, so people are really understand the notion of security with their ultrabooks and laptops and they maybe think about it for the smart phone the the haven't done anything about it so with mcafee there is a new mobile security suite you can download and get a high gear level of security on your smart phone. >> bryan deaner as brand manager what does that mean? >> people focus on the sort of productive things they can do with their decisis picks but they want to make sure they are secure and smart and what they are doing online and come of the footprints they are leaving in the trend is they're making if working with our new partner mcafee to make sure we are providing loveless security both at the software level and at the hardware level so we are trying to protect you on a couple different levels. skin and you have quite a large display here at the consumer
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electronics show. a lot of people down here. how important is ces? >> it sort of starts our year every year and even though it's more of a consumer focus in this crucial, we've really create bring to life a lot of the other phones and laptops and other devices used year-round the show and things like this but one of the building blocks that go inside that help the industry by into the innovation and intelligence. >> how is the fiscal health of intel given the the country has gone to? >> intel we had our best year ever so earnings are coming out next week but we had a really strong year and i think what we find is a couple of things we're noticing one, people want to have more and more devices, not less, so everyone has a laptop or tablet or ultrabook that you also want to have your smart phone as well as different designs with dennett in the
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family. so, i think people are buying multiple devices and number two, i think in the emerging markets as well as the established market we are seeing a nice run-up. we are almost countercyclical to what is happening in the economy because they think of the innovations and the new products we bring to market. >> bryan deaner is a manager of the intel corporation. wearier the consumer electronics show in las vegas. >> the last several weeks we've been showing coverage from the consumer electronics show in las vegas. the show happened in january of this year. if you would like to watch the previous programs or any communicators programs, go to c-span.org.
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